Planet Iron Blogger SF

April 26, 2024

Doctor Popular

Happy Birthday, Pedro Flores

Pedro Flores, an Filipino American immigrant who is known as the “Father Of Yo-Yo”, was born on this day in 1896. So I made a quick drawing to celebrate his birthday.

The yo-yo (also known as the bandolore, incroyable, l’émigrette, and the quiz) had been around for centuries, but Pedro created a new method of attaching the string in the 1920s that allowed the toy to “sleep” when it reached the bottom of the string. Up until his invention, yo-yos only went up and down! In 1932, Pedro sold his company to Don Duncan.

Flores left the Philippines when he was 19 to go to the High School of Commerce in San Francisco. Later, he studied law at the University of California, Berkeley and the Hastings College of Law in San Francisco. Though he dropped out of law school to start his own business, he clearly used his legal training throughout his career. For instance, he was savvy enough to trademark the name “Yo-Yo” (a Tagalog word that means “come and go”, according to wikipedia).

It’s also said that Pedro Flores patented his unique method of attaching string around the yo-yo’s axle, but I can not find that patent. It’s possible it’s there and I can’t find it, or that the technique was never actually patented. I tend to believe the latter. When Duncan acquired Flores’ company, he was quite litigious with the “Yo-Yo” trademark, so if there was a patent too, you know Duncan would have tried protecting it as well.

Pedro sold the Flores Yo-Yo Company to Donald Duncan in 1932, but kept working on different yo-yo businesses after the sale. I’m going to go out on a limb here and say that when Flores sold his business to Duncan, the contract might not have stipulated a noncompete clause. That’s just a guess, but I imagine he knew enough about law to know that Duncan couldn’t stop him from competing.

Here is a great video by Dr. Lucky about Pedro Flores:

The post <span class='p-name'>Happy Birthday, Pedro Flores</span> appeared first on Doc Pop's Blog.

by doc at April 26, 2024 07:57 PM

April 24, 2024

Monoprinciples

Be the one not talking

Life is short; let's not waste another minute being deaf to the beauty of the people we know.
–Marcia McReynolds

It's energizing to be the one talking. No human is exempt from the need to be heard. But in conversation, holding the conch has a catch: every second you are speaking, you are not listening. To learn about yourself, keep talking. To learn about the universe, be the one not talking.

For some humans, talking is thinking. Talking adds structure to events, brings shape to unformed ideas, and sifts insights from emotions. Talking is a forum to unlatch from secrets (Secrets are like termites). Talking is an alternative to violence in conflict (Bring your adversary closer). Talking is useful.

Listening is where you postpone your own agenda, shift away from your cluster of narratives, and delve into other universes called humans. Listening is a way to enact empathy, by witnessing without judgment and offering the gift of attention. But listening requires energy and is somewhat less delicious than talking.

Being selfish creatures, you would think humans would be listening-obsessed. Some of you are. You live in ravenous pursuit of the wisdom your own bodies could never produce, a pathology known as curiosity. I am grateful for you.

For the rest of us, the tendency to hold and squeeze the conch is potent. I am reminded that a conch is a shell. You can also put it to your ear, and listen.

by V Sri at April 24, 2024 04:03 PM

Vivek Sri

1200 most frequently used words

This list is from Rebecca Sitton’s “Spelling Sourcebook,” pages 77-82. It is a “cross-referenced compilation” of several massive word studies, including the American Heritage Word Frequency Study (Carroll, Davies, Richman), and several other studies, including the work of Gates, Horn, Rinsland, Greene and Loomer, Harris and Jacobsen.

  • a
  • ability
  • able
  • about
  • above
  • accept
  • accident
  • according
  • account
  • across
  • act
  • action
  • activities
  • actually
  • add
  • addition
  • address
  • affect
  • afraid
  • after
  • afternoon
  • again
  • against
  • age
  • ago
  • agree
  • ahead
  • air
  • alive
  • all
  • allowed
  • almost
  • alone
  • along
  • already
  • also
  • although
  • altogether
  • always
  • am
  • American
  • among
  • amount
  • an
  • ancient
  • and
  • angle
  • angry
  • animal
  • animals
  • another
  • answer
  • any
  • anyone
  • anything
  • apart
  • apartment
  • appear
  • apply
  • are
  • area
  • arm
  • army
  • around
  • arrange
  • arrived
  • article
  • as
  • ask
  • asked
  • at
  • ate
  • attached
  • attention
  • audience
  • author
  • available
  • avenue
  • average
  • avoid
  • away
  • baby
  • back
  • bad
  • bag
  • balance
  • ball
  • band
  • bank
  • barbecue
  • base
  • baseball
  • basic
  • be
  • bear
  • beat
  • beautiful
  • became
  • because
  • become
  • bed
  • been
  • before
  • began
  • begin
  • behind
  • being
  • believe
  • belong
  • below
  • beneath
  • beside
  • best
  • better
  • between
  • beyond
  • bicycle
  • big
  • bill
  • bird
  • bit
  • black
  • blood
  • blow
  • blue
  • board
  • boat
  • body
  • book
  • born
  • both
  • bottle
  • bottom
  • bought
  • box
  • boy
  • bread
  • break
  • breakfast
  • breath
  • bright
  • bring
  • broke
  • broken
  • brother
  • brought
  • brown
  • build
  • built
  • burn
  • bus
  • business
  • busy
  • but
  • buy
  • by
  • cabin
  • called
  • came
  • camp
  • can
  • cancel
  • cannot
  • can’t
  • capital
  • captain
  • car
  • care
  • careful
  • carefully
  • carry
  • case
  • cat
  • catch
  • cattle
  • caught
  • cause
  • cent
  • center
  • century
  • certain
  • chair
  • chance
  • change
  • chapter
  • character
  • charge
  • check
  • chief
  • child
  • children
  • choose
  • church
  • circle
  • citizen
  • city
  • class
  • clean
  • clear
  • climate
  • climbed
  • close
  • clothes
  • coast
  • coat
  • coffee
  • cold
  • collect
  • college
  • color
  • column
  • combine
  • come
  • common
  • community
  • company
  • compare
  • complete
  • concern
  • condition
  • connect
  • consider
  • construction
  • contain
  • continue
  • control
  • conversation
  • convince
  • cook
  • cool
  • copy
  • corn
  • corner
  • correct
  • cost
  • cotton
  • could
  • couldn’t
  • council
  • count
  • country
  • couple
  • courage
  • course
  • cover
  • cross
  • crowd
  • current
  • cut
  • daily
  • dance
  • danger
  • dangerous
  • dark
  • daughter
  • day
  • dead
  • deal
  • dear
  • death
  • decide
  • deep
  • describe
  • desert
  • design
  • details
  • determined
  • develop
  • dictionary
  • did
  • didn’t
  • die
  • difference
  • different
  • difficult
  • dinner
  • direction
  • disappear
  • discover
  • discuss
  • disease
  • distance
  • divide
  • do
  • doctor
  • does
  • doesn’t
  • dog
  • dollars
  • dome
  • don’t
  • door
  • double
  • down
  • dozen
  • draw
  • dress
  • drink
  • drive
  • drop
  • drove
  • dry
  • during
  • dust
  • each
  • early
  • earth
  • east
  • easy
  • eat
  • edge
  • education
  • effect
  • eight
  • either
  • electric
  • electricity
  • else
  • employee
  • empty
  • end
  • enemy
  • energy
  • engine
  • English
  • enjoy
  • enough
  • entered
  • entire
  • environment
  • equal
  • equipment
  • escape
  • especially
  • even
  • evening
  • event
  • ever
  • every
  • everybody
  • everyone
  • everything
  • evidence
  • exactly
  • example
  • excellent
  • except
  • excited
  • exercise
  • expect
  • experience
  • experiment
  • explain
  • express
  • extra
  • eye
  • face
  • fact
  • factory
  • fair
  • fall
  • familiar
  • family
  • famous
  • far
  • farm
  • farmer
  • farther
  • fast
  • father
  • favorite
  • fear
  • feather
  • feed
  • feel
  • feet
  • fell
  • felt
  • few
  • field
  • fifty
  • fight
  • figure
  • fill
  • final
  • finally
  • find
  • fine
  • finger
  • finish
  • fire
  • first
  • fish
  • fit
  • five
  • flat
  • flew
  • flight
  • floor
  • flower
  • fly
  • follow
  • food
  • foot
  • for
  • for
  • force
  • foreign
  • forest
  • forget
  • form
  • forth
  • forward
  • found
  • free
  • frequently
  • fresh
  • friend
  • frighten
  • from
  • front
  • frozen
  • fruit
  • full
  • fun
  • function
  • furniture
  • further
  • future
  • game
  • garage
  • garden
  • gas
  • gave
  • general
  • get
  • girl
  • give
  • glad
  • glass
  • go
  • going
  • gold
  • gone
  • good
  • got
  • government
  • grass
  • gray
  • great
  • green
  • grew
  • groceries
  • ground
  • group
  • grow
  • grown
  • guess
  • guide
  • gun
  • had
  • hair
  • half
  • hand
  • happen
  • happened
  • happy
  • hard
  • has
  • hat
  • have
  • he
  • head
  • healthy
  • hear
  • heard
  • heart
  • heart
  • heat
  • heavy
  • height
  • held
  • help
  • her
  • here
  • herself
  • he’s
  • high
  • hill
  • him
  • himself
  • his
  • history
  • hit
  • hold
  • hole
  • home
  • hope
  • horse
  • hospital
  • hot
  • hour
  • house
  • how
  • however
  • huge
  • human
  • hundred
  • hungry
  • hurt
  • husband
  • I
  • ice
  • I’d
  • idea
  • identity
  • if
  • I’ll
  • I’m
  • imagine
  • immediately
  • important
  • improve
  • in
  • inch
  • include
  • increase
  • indeed
  • indicate
  • individual
  • industry
  • influence
  • information
  • insects
  • inside
  • instance
  • instead
  • instrument
  • interest
  • into
  • iron
  • is
  • island
  • isn’t
  • it
  • its
  • it’s
  • itself
  • I’ve
  • job
  • join
  • jump
  • just
  • keep
  • kept
  • key
  • kind
  • king
  • kitchen
  • knew
  • knife
  • know
  • knowledge
  • lady
  • laid
  • land
  • language
  • large
  • last
  • late
  • later
  • laugh
  • law
  • lay
  • lead
  • leader
  • learn
  • learned
  • least
  • leather
  • leave
  • leaves
  • led
  • left
  • length
  • less
  • let
  • letter
  • level
  • library
  • license
  • lie
  • life
  • light
  • like
  • line
  • liquid
  • list
  • listen
  • little
  • live
  • lived
  • living
  • located
  • long
  • longer
  • look
  • lose
  • lost
  • lot
  • loud
  • love
  • low
  • machine
  • made
  • magazine
  • main
  • major
  • make
  • man
  • many
  • map
  • mark
  • market
  • married
  • match
  • material
  • matter
  • may
  • maybe
  • me
  • mean
  • meant
  • measure
  • meat
  • medicine
  • meet
  • member
  • men
  • mental
  • message
  • met
  • method
  • middle
  • might
  • milk
  • million
  • mind
  • mine
  • minute
  • miss
  • mistake
  • model
  • modern
  • moment
  • money
  • month
  • moon
  • more
  • morning
  • most
  • mother
  • motion
  • motor
  • mountain
  • mouth
  • move
  • movement
  • much
  • muscles
  • music
  • must
  • my
  • myself
  • name
  • narrow
  • nation
  • natural
  • nature
  • near
  • necessary
  • neck
  • need
  • neighbor
  • neither
  • never
  • new
  • newspaper
  • next
  • nice
  • night
  • nine
  • no
  • nobody
  • noise
  • none
  • nor
  • north
  • northern
  • nose
  • not
  • note
  • nothing
  • notice
  • now
  • number
  • object
  • observe
  • occur
  • ocean
  • of
  • off
  • offered
  • office
  • often
  • oh
  • oil
  • old
  • on
  • once
  • one
  • only
  • onto
  • open
  • operation
  • opportunity
  • opposite
  • or
  • order
  • ordinary
  • organize
  • original
  • other
  • our
  • out
  • outside
  • over
  • own
  • oxygen
  • page
  • paid
  • pair
  • paper
  • parents
  • particular
  • party
  • pass
  • past
  • path
  • pattern
  • pay
  • peace
  • pencil
  • people
  • perfect
  • perhaps
  • period
  • person
  • personal
  • physical
  • pick
  • picture
  • piece
  • place
  • plain
  • plan
  • plane
  • planet
  • plants
  • play
  • please
  • poem
  • point
  • police
  • political
  • poor
  • popular
  • population
  • position
  • possible
  • potatoes
  • pound
  • power
  • practice
  • prepare
  • present
  • president
  • pressure
  • pretty
  • prevent
  • principal
  • probably
  • problem
  • process
  • produce
  • product
  • program
  • progress
  • project
  • pronounce
  • proper
  • protect
  • proud
  • provide
  • public
  • pull
  • purpose
  • push
  • put
  • quality
  • quarter
  • question
  • quick
  • quiet
  • quite
  • race
  • radio
  • railroad
  • rain
  • raise
  • ran
  • rat
  • rather
  • reach
  • read
  • reading
  • ready
  • real
  • realize
  • really
  • reason
  • receive
  • recently
  • recognize
  • recommend
  • record
  • red
  • region
  • regular
  • remain
  • remember
  • repeat
  • report
  • represent
  • required
  • rest
  • result
  • return
  • review
  • rhythm
  • rich
  • ride
  • right
  • ring
  • rise
  • river
  • road
  • rock
  • rode
  • room
  • rope
  • rose
  • rough
  • round
  • row
  • rubber
  • rule
  • run
  • sad
  • safe
  • said
  • salt
  • same
  • sand
  • sat
  • saw
  • say
  • scale
  • school
  • science
  • sea
  • season
  • seat
  • second
  • secret
  • section
  • see
  • seem
  • seen
  • sell
  • send
  • sense
  • sent
  • sentence
  • separate
  • serious
  • service
  • set
  • settled
  • seven
  • several
  • shape
  • share
  • sharp
  • she
  • sheep
  • shell
  • ship
  • shook
  • shop
  • shore
  • short
  • shot
  • should
  • shoulder
  • show
  • shown
  • side
  • sight
  • sign
  • silent
  • silver
  • similar
  • simple
  • since
  • sincerely
  • sing
  • single
  • sister
  • sit
  • situation
  • six
  • size
  • skin
  • sky
  • sleep
  • slow
  • small
  • snow
  • so
  • social
  • soft
  • soil
  • sold
  • soldier
  • solid
  • solution
  • solve
  • some
  • someone
  • something
  • son
  • song
  • soon
  • sort
  • sound
  • south
  • southern
  • space
  • speak
  • special
  • speech
  • speed
  • spelling
  • spend
  • spent
  • spoke
  • spot
  • spread
  • spring
  • square
  • stage
  • stand
  • standard
  • star
  • start
  • state
  • statement
  • station
  • stay
  • steam
  • steel
  • step
  • stick
  • still
  • stomach
  • stone
  • stood
  • stop
  • store
  • story
  • straight
  • strange
  • stream
  • street
  • strength
  • string
  • strong
  • structure
  • students
  • study
  • style
  • subject
  • success
  • such
  • suddenly
  • sugar
  • suggested
  • summer
  • sun
  • supply
  • support
  • suppose
  • sure
  • surface
  • surprise
  • swimming
  • symbol
  • system
  • table
  • tail
  • take
  • talk
  • tall
  • teacher
  • team
  • teeth
  • telephone
  • television
  • tell
  • temperature
  • ten
  • terrible
  • test
  • than
  • thank
  • that
  • that’s - the
  • their
  • them
  • themselves
  • then
  • there
  • therefore
  • these
  • they
  • they’re
  • thick
  • thin
  • thing
  • think
  • third
  • this
  • those
  • though
  • thought
  • thousand
  • three
  • threw
  • through
  • throughout
  • thus
  • till
  • time
  • tiny
  • title
  • to
  • today
  • together
  • told
  • tomorrow
  • tongue
  • too
  • took
  • top
  • total
  • touch
  • toward
  • town
  • trade
  • traffic
  • train
  • transportation
  • travel
  • tree
  • trip
  • trouble
  • truck
  • true
  • try
  • tube
  • turn
  • turned
  • twelve
  • twenty
  • twice
  • two
  • type
  • under
  • understand
  • unit
  • United States
  • unless
  • until
  • up
  • upon
  • us
  • use
  • useful
  • usual
  • usually
  • valley
  • value
  • variety
  • various
  • vegetable
  • very
  • village
  • visit
  • voice
  • wait
  • walked
  • wall
  • want
  • war
  • warm
  • was
  • wasn’t
  • waste
  • watch
  • water
  • way
  • we
  • wear
  • weather
  • week
  • weight
  • well
  • we’ll
  • went
  • were
  • we’re
  • west
  • wet
  • what
  • wheel
  • when
  • whenever
  • where
  • whether
  • which
  • while
  • whisper
  • white
  • who
  • whole
  • whose
  • why
  • wide
  • wife
  • wild
  • will
  • wind
  • window
  • winter
  • wire
  • wish
  • with
  • within
  • without
  • woman
  • women
  • won
  • wonder
  • won’t
  • wood
  • wooden
  • words
  • work
  • world
  • worse
  • worth
  • would
  • wouldn’t
  • write
  • wrong
  • wrote
  • yard
  • year
  • yellow
  • yes
  • yesterday
  • yet
  • you
  • you’ll
  • young
  • your
  • you’re
  • yourself

by 1200 most frequently used words at April 24, 2024 07:00 AM

April 23, 2024

I Like Turtles

Road trip: LA spring break

/2024/04/23/road-trip-la-spring-break.html

April 23, 2024 07:00 AM

April 22, 2024

Doctor Popular

Earth Day Trixel Art

Happy #EarthDay, y’all! Here’s some trixel art I made a few years back in Hexels Pro that I thought was a good fit for today.

Happy #EarthDay, y'all. Some original #TrixelArt from a few years back.

The post <span class='p-name'>Earth Day Trixel Art</span> appeared first on Doc Pop's Blog.

by doc at April 22, 2024 10:08 PM

Mike Hale’s art for “Responsive Counterweight” tutorials

I’ve been developing a style of yo-yoing that blends counterweight style (or “5A”) with modern responsive (or “0A”) play. I’m really happy with the style and the unique way it feels, so I’ve been publishing a series of tutorials on Youtube that help teach the basics. I’ve published full playlist of those tutorials here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1g-GXFBtDQdtP-p0w4UYpfEiPLt-n42B

My filming and editing style has changed over the 4 years I’ve been making these videos, so I thought it would be fun to hire my old friend Mike Hales to update the video thumbnails to have a more consistent style. He did a great job, so I wanted to share those videos here so folks could see his art in action:

To see more of Mike’s art check out his website, instagram, tiktok, or threads.

The post <span class='p-name'>Mike Hale’s art for “Responsive Counterweight” tutorials</span> appeared first on Doc Pop's Blog.

by doc at April 22, 2024 04:41 AM

Certainly Strange

Multiclassing in Multiplayer

I decided to have my drow paladin pick up a few levels of bard in our multiplayer campaign so we could have jam sessions together. He’s an Eilistraeen paladin, so honestly a few levels of bard just works out pretty thematically anyway.

by Steen at April 22, 2024 04:14 AM

April 20, 2024

I before E except Gleitzman

Welcome to the buds of spring! 🌱

Welcome to the buds of spring! 🌱

April 20, 2024 04:10 PM

April 19, 2024

I Like Turtles

Mt. Tam bike ride

/2024/04/19/mt-tam-bike-ride.html

April 19, 2024 07:00 AM

April 17, 2024

Monoprinciples

There can't be this many bests

Every time somebody recommends a doctor, he's always the best. "Oh, is he good?" "Oh, he's the best. This guy's the best." They can't all be the best. There can't be this many bests. Someone's graduating at the bottom of these classes.
—Jerry Seinfeld

Modern discourse slants toward the superlative. Maybe it's a Western thing. I don't recall my immigrant parents describing anything as "the best." There was a lot of "It's fine" and "you look hungry." But take a peek online and everything skews topwise. There can't be this many bests.

It's not even clear what "best" means. In Avoid faster, cheaper, better, I talked about how "better" is a special kind of meaningless:

Better means chaining yourself to some external: your competition, technology, or the status quo. And it's murky. Better for you might be worse for me.

The oxymoronic "best" attempts double-duty as both relative and absolute—appearing in the form of arbitrary opinions of someone on the Internet.

And still, you breathlessly chase the best:

  • The best 150 companies to work for

  • The best trash can under $500 for most people

  • The best way to learn tai chi, for dads, in under 5 minutes

There is no best path, no best opinion, no best you. "Best" implies an apex to this maddening chaos called life, but the universe is neither rankable, nor climbable. It's all around you and it changes all the time. It is neither the best, nor is it the worst.

You are enough. Every thing, every one, every way has worth. If you want to stop seeking, all you have to do is see.

Microprinciples is the best newsletter about microprinciples on the internet.

by V Sri at April 17, 2024 03:40 PM

April 15, 2024

Claire Kao

out-of-body, out-of-world

I experienced a total solar eclipse on Monday (⌐■_■)


A time of cosmic & geological overwhelm
This rock was our viewing spot. 10 minutes before totality

I knew things would ~get weird~, I knew the light would be nightmarish, I knew people often faint, scream, and cry during,

but I was not prepared for: 

  • How suddenly the world went from light to dark, even at the last moments of a tiny sliver of sun, which is why a partial eclipse feels nothing like a full one. 
Interesting thread about how our senses are logarithmic.
  • The silence/held breath of the last moment before the moon slipped all the way over the sun. Everything was still very briefly: a friend across the pond from us took video of small waves that appeared on the pond surface in that moment. 
  • The collective gasp when the sun suddenly went out. We were in a remote place, with little awareness of anyone else around us—but the gasps that emanated around the pond revealed the other eclipse viewers. And I think that was the point—for me, it felt and sounded less like a visceral primal scream, but rather a dumbfounded, kneejerk “are you experiencing this, am I alone”. 
  • The loud bird chirping that responded to the sudden darkness. I generally find bird chirping a pleasant nature sound, but with the volume and length it persisted (throughout the 3 minutes of totality), it began to communicate an uneasy fear and confusion from the animals around us. When the light came back, one of the first things we saw were 2 crows dive-bombing and chasing a hawk—I wonder what mischief was attempted during the confusion. 
  • Automatic night-lights turning on in the darkness. We were sitting next to a graveyard, and the solar-powered nightlights at the headstones suddenly lit up. 
  • How cold it got. It was a fully warm, nearly hot day: 45 minutes earlier I was in a t-shirt with rosy cheeks. As it got dark, I found myself shivering under my puffiest coat. 
  • The 360-degree sunset. We were fortunate to have a 360-degree view of the horizon, and to see the orange stretching all around the pond felt like science-fiction, like we had been transported to a different planet with radically different natural laws. 
  • A little red dot at the bottom right of the corona. Which I now know was a solar prominence, "a massive loop of the sun’s plasma that hangs attached to the visible surface of the sun, forming perhaps within a day but lasting as long as several months". 
  • An intense feeling of awe, complete loss of control. It was unlike any natural experience I've had living in this world several decades—it felt like nature was mocking our flawed expectations of how weather/sun/light works. I felt helpless, like everything can be gone/change in a second. Is anything I know real—in the silvery purple of total darkness, are Peter and Reid aside me just going to fade away with a wisp? It was among the only times I’ve held and examined fear in a detached way—an existential, sensory feeling rather than the blinding panic of immediate danger.
The best picture I got of the eclipse was of its reflection in the still water below me. 
Gratitude, togetherness, fullness after 🫶

——————

On a lighter, eclipse-related note:

Several days after the eclipse, we saw the magnificent Jinkx Monsoon as Audrey in Little Shop of Horrors, a musical whose plot is premised on a solar eclipse that delivers to Earth an otherworldly, all-consuming alien in the shape of a horrifying plant. Makes complete sense to me as a plot point now 

by Claire (claire.kao@hey.com) at April 15, 2024 07:07 PM

April 14, 2024

I before E except Gleitzman

I Like Turtles

Jackiepalooza 2024

/2024/04/14/jackiepalooza-2024.html

April 14, 2024 07:00 AM

April 11, 2024

Doctor Popular

Getting A Yo-Yo Shout-Out in The Middle Of a Graffiti DVD from 2005

Bench Warmers was a documentary-style series of DVDs about freight train graffiti culture in the 2000s. These “Magazine DVDs” primarily focused on the art of writing on trains, but the series also featured interviews, stop motion animation, underground hip hop, and musical performances.

In “Bench Warmers Volume 3”, they even featured a few minutes of tricks by a couple of young yo-yo players. Imagine my surprise when I heard my name mentioned 13 minutes into a graffiti documentary from 2005.

Shout out to Brian Lee and Dweeb for sharing their yo-yo skills in 2005’s Bench Warmers #3 DVD. Y’all killed it!

Thanks to Sedatxone for letting me know about this DVD and yo-yo segment too. What a cool find!

The post <span class='p-name'>Getting A Yo-Yo Shout-Out in The Middle Of a Graffiti DVD from 2005</span> appeared first on Doc Pop's Blog.

by doc at April 11, 2024 03:42 PM

April 10, 2024

Monoprinciples

Invite play into your process

Someday, you (writer, designer, maker, creator) may find yourself on the business end of the shovel, covered in soot, under the cold umbra of a deadline. In these moments you may feel the craft you love hardening into drudge, which must be avoided at all costs. The antidote? Invite play into your process.

Play is a mode of thinking, it’s not just futzing around. (See 10 Rules for Play.) Play turns problems into games and games are about action, not perfection. This lets you take risks and embrace wild ideas (Don’t leave out the impossible). And because play makes room for randomness, it can be a multiplier. (The universe is not binary and linear thinking leads to linear results.)

Play gives rise to non-obvious connections—and human connection too. It’s easier to collaborate when you turn down the pressure. Enabling play is itself a kind of work (which takes time), but a little lightness makes work feel lighter, which makes it easier to do, and that makes it more likely to happen. Such is the paradox of play: sometimes the scenic route is faster (The waste is what works).

I was gifted this lesson from a demanding (tyrannical, even) taskmaster of a boss: me, when I was self-employed. I squeezed my own oranges until it was impossible to create. Eventually, I put down the whip. I realized that nothing was on fire. I learned to make the process recite-able, and embrace the clunk, and just have a little fun.

Play must be part of it. Otherwise, what’s the point?

So make the making merry. Don’t just carry out the process, revel in it. If you’re a person that facilitates making, put the “fun” in function and insert ways to play. Sometimes the most productive thing you can do is find the part worth celebrating.

by V Sri at April 10, 2024 01:54 PM

April 08, 2024

Certainly Strange

Cursed Lamb

I decided to try and make one of those horrible cursed lamb cakes, but I feel like it didn’t come out horrible enough

by Steen at April 08, 2024 07:31 AM

Doctor Popular

#SidewalkFriends: Christy’s Slide in the Sky

I like to keep an eye out for cool shapes during my walks and use them as inspiration for my #SidewalkFriends drawings. It’s like my version of hunting for Pokémon.

I was walking around our neighborhood when I noticed these bumpy lines that were located around the curb cut ramps on sidewalk corners. I always assumed these lines were meant to provide traction at the top of a sidewalk ramp, but I recently learned these bumpy textures are called “tactile paving”.

Tactile paving are small textures that can indicate extra information to a visually impaired pedestrian. In this case, the lines indicate the location of a ramp a down ramp. That would also indicate that the pedestrian is about to enter the street.

The “water” access on port on top of the tactile lines was the final bit of inspiration for this week’s sketch.

A photo of bumpy lines in the concrete near a curb cut ramp. There is also a round cover on the sidewalk that provides access to utility lines under the sidewalk. A drawing of a young woman sliding down a tall slide high in the sky. There are clouds floating around her and she has a joyful look on her face. The colors of her clothes are bright pinks and yellows. She has short green hair and light brown skin. The style of art is cartoony with some lines and colors that have a coloring pencil texture.

Today’s sketch: “Christy’s Slide In the Sky”. Inspired by a segment of tactile paving on the sidewalk in SF.

— Doctor Popular (@docpop) 2024-04-06T16:47:23.418Z

The post <span class='p-name'>#SidewalkFriends: Christy’s Slide in the Sky</span> appeared first on Doc Pop's Blog.

by doc at April 08, 2024 04:15 AM

Claire Kao

April 07, 2024

I before E except Gleitzman

Springtime, with Virginia Bluebells

Springtime, with Virginia Bluebells

April 07, 2024 08:55 PM

Springtime, with Virginia Bluebells

Springtime, with Virginia Bluebells

April 07, 2024 08:35 PM

I Like Turtles

On the road

/2024/04/07/on-the-road.html

April 07, 2024 07:00 AM

April 03, 2024

Monoprinciples

Darkness is not the same as evil

Darkness is the opposite of light, but it is more than an absence. Darkness is a force in our universe. It causes distress and pain. It destroys all, eventually. Even so, darkness is not the same as evil. Darkness is a part of life and a part of you.

To be precise, darkness is the realm that’s unreached by knowledge, structure, and harmony. Where confusion, struggle, and conflict happen. This is also known as chaos. The word may evoke “pandemonium” but it comes from old Greek meaning “vast, formless void.” It’s closer to the atonal warmup of the strings in the orchestra, than the clatter of a knocked over drum.

Chaos is distinguished from order, the climb of every plant toward sunlight. It is the civilizations-long process of sensemaking the Earth. All the meta we make to sustain human activity. Order is challenged by chaos. Humans need only imagine chaos and we run to our fires, wielding the light like a sword. We arm ourselves with structure, process, laws, little doorbell cameras, passive-aggressive notes, guns, facts, and meta and thrust it into the darkness and call it evil.

But it isn’t evil. It is merely the opposite of order.

When you confuse darkness for evil, you ascribe malice to the dark energy upon which the entire universe floats. A hurricane can’t be evil, nor can the universe. When you slander the universe, you recast the troughs of an infinite wave into a being with intention, and worse, you name Her as the problem. (But the problem cannot be other people.)

All people, even you, contain darkness. If we did not contain darkness, we could not understand any stories with an antagonist. Nor could we understand jokes, each one a twist of chaos and order together in a candy wrapper. Without darkness, we would not feel the friction required for growth or change. Without darkness, we would not know the meaning of the light.

Darkness is chaos, mother of the earth. Order is light, our daddy in the sky. Like night and day, they alternate in their domains. But they meet every day, at twilight and dusk. They may be adversaries, but they must also share the sky.

by V Sri at April 03, 2024 02:01 PM

April 01, 2024

Claire Kao

Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence (1983)

image.png

A year ago March 28, Ryuichi Sakamoto passed away. I primarily know his work through the movie Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence, where he stars alongside David Bowie in this heart-wrenching, gorgeous film about humanity in wartime. The movie depicts the spiritual torture of realizing the humanity of your conflict-defined enemies, especially when you come to love them. With this depiction, the extreme dehumanization of war becomes apparent; how dehumanizing an enemy is required for war, and how the act of dehumanizing itself dehumanizes. This movie is, for me, the most compelling anti-war meditation in film.

Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence is also a beautiful queer love story, with David Bowie and Ryuichi Sakamoto playing star-crossed lovers. We get to see the differences between an Eastern and Western sense of honor and duty, and in either culture, how confusing discipline is in the face of desire. The way tortured desire acts out in violence, and the cruelty of a forbidden, unfulfilled love. A movie of extreme heartache that still shows the power of love to soar past the arbitrary, ugly rules created by Man.

Sakamoto, in addition to starring in a leading role, also created the score, in what has to be the most beautiful use of the synth.

As someone who first became acquainted with Sakamoto through this movie, it was a revelation getting to hear him play his greatest pieces in this year's Ryuichi Sakamoto: Opus. The film is a masterpiece and a great way to take in his musical genius whether or not you are familiar. I strongly encourage seeing it in a movie theater if possible 🎹. 

Some screenshots from Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence: 


image.png

There was a recent thread on Twitter: "Show me an image from a film that immediately makes you start to tear up." This is mine:
image.png

---

Oppenheimer & Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence


40 years later, Tom Conti still holding the emotional/moral center. Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence is one of Christopher Nolan's favorite movies.

---

 To all who celebrate, today:

https://x.com/SiddhantAdlakha/status/1774501637748396098

by Claire (claire.kao@hey.com) at April 01, 2024 05:48 AM

I before E except Gleitzman

Love and Endearment

Love and Endearment

There once was a man from the South
Complements would flow forth from his mouth
“You’re fire” to Pookie
“Your Kelly, your Louie”
Now post it before we go out

April 01, 2024 04:00 AM

Doctor Popular

Visibly Mending My Blackbird Raum Shirt

One of my favorite t-shirts had some holes in it, so I finally took some time to repair it. I’ve long been a fan of r/VisibleMending on Reddit, but didn’t know how to go about doing a visible mending project myself. I asked around and ChurchHatesTucker had a great suggestion to use a buttonhole stitch and some high contrast embroidery thread:

A Mastodon post from ChurchHatesTucker that says:

That was great advice and I love how it turned out:

A light blue thread hand stitched onto a white t-shirt. The stitch is high contrast, but also has an interesting pattern to it. Rather than hiding a hole in the shirt, this thread draws attention to the fact that it was repaired. You can also see a similar stitch using red thread on another part of the shirt. Red thread stitched between a sections of the original silkscreen on the shirt. This is the same red thread that was used on the repairs. A blue thread hand stitched onto a white t-shirt. The stitch is high contrast, but also has an interesting pattern to it. Rather than hiding a hole in the shirt, this thread draws attention to the fact that it was repaired.

Visible mending is very similar to Kintsugi, in that the idea is to treat repairs as part of the history of a loved object, rather than tying to hide those repairs.

The post <span class='p-name'>Visibly Mending My Blackbird Raum Shirt</span> appeared first on Doc Pop's Blog.

by doc at April 01, 2024 03:55 AM

March 29, 2024

I Like Turtles

Leaving Vanta

/2024/03/29/leaving-vanta.html

March 29, 2024 07:00 AM

March 27, 2024

Monoprinciples

Approach the unsaid corners

Over time, every relationship amasses a set of conventions, vocabulary, and straight-up lore. Hotwords that inflame specific nostalgia. Inside jokes. Preposterous slang. This history, of everything said, is the canvas on which you jointly paint every conversation. It shapes all that is said afterward, and it tints how it’s understood.

And then there is the unsaid. This is your invitation to approach the unsaid corners.

Over time, every relationship also amasses a swelling of dark matter; all the things left unsaid. In your closest relationships, what are the things you don’t talk about? What are the conversations you have thought about, but never had? What is unsaid?

Before you blurt, there are things to consider. Like what are the reasons those things are unsaid? What emotions come up? What would happen if you revealed yourself? But sometimes it’s best not to worry about conversations before you’ve had them.

There are perhaps, valid reasons to avoid certain rooms in the manor. But it leaves your co-created world smaller. Less room for play, fewer avenues for support, and less canvas for the painting. When you approach the unsaid corners of your relationship, you might actually find yourself.

by V Sri at March 27, 2024 02:30 PM

March 26, 2024

Vivek Sri

How to install a better dictionary on your Mac

In 2014, James Somers wrote a blog post that changed me as a writer. This was the post that alerted me to the existence of Draft #4, a book I try to re-read every year or so, and the post that helped me realize, I was probably using the wrong dictionary.

The “right” dictionary would be Webster’s New International Dictionary of the English Language originally pubished in 1909 and reprinted in 1913. It is known by word nerds as Webster’s 1913.

Here are the full instructions to install and download on to your Mac.

Once you do this, you will see Webster’s Unabridged 1913 as an option next to the default Apple dictionary. Enjoy.

The word of the day is Cromulent

by How to install a better dictionary on your Mac at March 26, 2024 07:00 AM

March 25, 2024

Doctor Popular

Moving On From WP Engine

I recently lost my job at WP Engine. Over the past ten years, I had the chance to work on tons of great projects at WP Engine and TorqueMag (a WordPress-themed publication), so I thought I’d share some of my favorite projects here.

Gif The Halls

Gif the Halls was the first big project I worked on for WP Engine. The project allowed users to write a unique holiday message, which we’d then project onto the side of a building in downtown San Francisco. After the message was projected, we’d then send footage of that message to the original user. This was a huge project that involved working with digital artists, getting permits from the city, renting a giant projector, hiring security guards, and even operating a scissor lift. What an incredible experience!

A message projected onto the side of a building in downtown San Francisco. The message says An animated gif from Gif The Halls. This animated fireplace animation was something I created for the Gif The Halls project.

Interviews

A big part of my role at Torque Magazine was shooting interviews. This started off with me going to WordCamps all over the world to shoot interviews. I’d shoot about 10-20 interviews, edit them, and post them online before the conference was over. Like these videos I shot at WordCamp San Francisco in 2014.

After the pandemic, this role switched to doing long form interviews with guests online. This was a chance to dive deeper into WordPress and Open Source topics, like this conversation we had about ActivityPub, the Fediverse, and WordPress.

Doc Pop’s News Drop

Doc Pop’s News Drop was a series of bite size videos that covered WordPress news and events. These weekly episodes covered recent developments, upcoming releases, and more. Here’s an episode about Wapuu, the WordPress mascot.

Torque Toons

Along with the videos, I also created a series of WordPress-themed cartoons for Torque, called the “Torque Toons”. These were so much fun to make!

A cartoon of Cookie Monster using a computer. He sees a message that says A drawing of Santa sitting in front of a computer. The text says A drawing of Jabba using a computer. The text says A family sitting at a dinner table and staring at a laptop. The text says

Press This Podcast

Of all the projects I worked on at WP Engine, my favorite was hosting Press This: The WordPress Community Podcast. Press This was originally created by Joost de Valk many years ago, then run by David Vogelpohl, before I started running it. I ran the show for two years and had a chance to interview fascinating people.

One of my favorite Press This episodes was this chat with Chris Messina, the creator of the hasthag.

What’s next?

I really enjoyed my time at WP Engine and was happy to work on so many creative projects over the years. I loved being able to work my music, audio production, illustration, and other pursuits into my day job. A personal highlight of my time at WP Engine was interviewing fascinating people in the WordPress space, especially on the Press This podcast. I’ll miss that the most.

I don’t know what direction my career will take next, but I really hope to have a chance to continue spotlighting creative individuals through interviews or some other form. Working in the WordPress space was fun, but I’d be open to other areas as well. Before I was working in WordPress, I was working in the games industry. It’d be fun to have a chance to work in game design again someday.

If you are looking for creative talent, I’d love to chat! It’s been a while since I’ve been on the job market, but I do have a LinkedIn page where you can learn more about me.

The post <span class='p-name'>Moving On From WP Engine</span> appeared first on Doc Pop's Blog.

by doc at March 25, 2024 08:42 PM

Claire Kao

kwee’s weeks in photos

In Oppenheimer, we never understood why there was such a glaring typo as “trian crossing”. On my 3rd watch (!!), I realized the sign reads “pedestrian crossing”


Versailles 
Rolo’s 


Calumet


Can never get quite enough sleep 
The brilliant Ivo Dimchev
NYT museum
Clockwise: 
- an alternate NYT front page on November 9, 2016
- a letter explaining the decision to begin including games in the NYT (to cheer the general populace after Pearl Harbor), and the first crossword published in the Times
- “Business Announcement” written by Adolph S. Ochs on April 18, 1896, after he had assumed control of The Times.
"It will be my earnest aim that The New York Times give the news, all the news, in concise and attractive form, in language that is parliamentary in good society, and give it as early, if not earlier, than it can be learned through any other reliable medium; to give the news impartially, without fear or favor, regardless of party, sect, or interests involved; to make the columns of The New York Times a forum for the consideration of all questions of public importance, and to that end to invite intelligent discussion trom all shades of opinion."
- a gargoyle from the original NYT building


Up Down


Kites at Fort Funston 


The Oakland Hills
🎊


Terry Allen at the Hollywood Forever Masonic Temple 


Jamrock
The Kills


The brown couch contains multitudes 


Film Forum, always 
The Jenkins, always 
FKA Twigs, always

by Claire (claire.kao@hey.com) at March 25, 2024 04:16 AM

March 24, 2024

I before E except Gleitzman

“Here lies the strong hidalgo whose bravery exceeds so much that even death did not triumph over his…

“Here lies the strong hidalgo whose bravery exceeds so much that even death did not triumph over his life. He experienced all that the world has on his body, and to be sane in such an ordeal, he believed his fortune to be mad and lived as a madman.”

March 24, 2024 11:17 PM

March 22, 2024

I Like Turtles

Midweek skiing

/2024/03/22/midweek-skiing.html

March 22, 2024 07:00 AM

March 20, 2024

Monoprinciples

Don't research and write at the same time

“The thing all writers do best is find ways to avoid writing.”
–Alan Dean Foster

This principle of writing will sound obvious, but many principles do, once expressed.

Writing often begins with research. A relaxed period marked by supine stints of reading. Research is sometimes followed by the misery known as writing. Now here’s the aforementioned obviousness: bring research to a close, completely, before you start writing. Don’t research and write at the same time.

Microprinciples is supported by readers like you.

Research is a process of collecting thoughts. It’s not always so formal; you are always collecting. Everything you read passes through the filters of your identity and commingles with the bromine of your bias (and You most definitely have a bias) to become your thoughts. (You are what you read.)

But You are not your thoughts and your thoughts are not “you.” Most of your thoughts are other people’s ideas: borrowed facsimiles, furtively installed, or outright theft.

Most of these thoughts are limp and worthless because You can't be good at everything, and Knowledge is not the same as information. But given enough time in the marinade, some of the critters in your brain wriggle to life. You decide to snare a few in a net and wrap them in paper. (You might even Stack your sentences to test their mettle.)

But take heed.

You must put down the shovel before you pick up the pen. Declare research closed before opening the floor to prose. Just as you cannot inhale and exhale at the same time (unless you are one of those folks playing the digeridoo), you must not research and write at the same time.

Because every piece of writing, is merely that. A piece. In your quest for completion, you may languish in the parlour of input instead of the workshop of output. But consider that every book you’ve picked up was written by someone forced to put their books down, to start writing.

So stop reading. And start writing.

by V Sri at March 20, 2024 04:12 PM

March 18, 2024

Doctor Popular

Instant Band Night

Instant Band Night is a party where musicians who have just met are asked to form a band and perform a song in five minutes. It was created by Jon Sung, who is a fabulously talented emcee, organizer, copywriter, AND (we were surprised to discover) violinist.

The event happens every other month in Oakland, so I went with some friends to the March IBN performance and had a blast. The basic format is something like this:

  • Would be performers drop their name in one of the cans labelled “Guitar”, “Bass”, “Vocals”, “Drums”, “Keyboards”, “Other”, and “Poster Artist”
  • The MC then draws names at random and those folks have 5 minutes to meet, come up with a band name, and write a song
  • Five minutes after meeting each other, the band then goes onstage and performs the song live in front of a crowd of about 100 people.
  • Right before each band gives their first public performance ever, the MC calls out another batch of names and keeps the cycle going smoothly throughout the night.

If you sign up as a poster artist, you work on poster art for the band that is currently on stage and show it off at the end of their performance.

Several members of an

The result felt like a cross between karaoke and improv comedy. Some songs started off rough, but you could feel the band learning to work together and form a groove. The styles would vary wildly from band to band too. We heard punk, klezmer, ska, space rock, folk, and much more. Here are a few examples from throughout the night:

And here is the only full song I recorded that night:

Instant Band Night is a bi-monthly all-ages event in Oakland. The next one is on May 9th and I highly recommend you check it out. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/instant-band-night-26-spring-fling-tickets-863940929577?aff=butts

The post <span class='p-name'>Instant Band Night</span> appeared first on Doc Pop's Blog.

by doc at March 18, 2024 06:00 PM

Claire Kao

No Cuts to Libraries!

https://www.nypl.org/speakout

Last week, leaders of NYC's three public library systems (NY, Brooklyn, Queens) launched a campaign against Mayor Eric Adams' and the NY City Council's proposed budget cuts in the coming FY 2025; these cuts would be the highest proposed budget cuts to the libraries in over a decade. If you're a NYC resident, please send a letter to Mayor Adams and the City Council via this form!

I used to go to the public library a lot when I was a child, specifically the Montana Branch of the Santa Monica Public Library, which has an iconic mid-century modern natural stone facade:
Image source

And studied for the SATs at what was then the newly-updated SMPL main branch:
Image source

While I loved libraries for their books, they were, more importantly, cherished Third Places for me growing up: I didn't have to spend money to be there, I wasn't in my hyper-competitive school or ballet environments, my parents weren't watching my every move.

And though I loved libraries as a child/teenager, I am ashamed to admit that after moving to NYC for college, I didn't actively continue going to public libraries; partially because those on Columbia's campus were also beautiful spaces with any book you could want—but my friends could also be found there, at all hours of the day and night. And after undergrad, I got into the habit of buying books and perusing bookstores, which was a privilege: my justification at ~$25/book was that it wasn't too much more than a movie and would entertain/engage for much longer than 2 hours. This logic doesn't really make sense in retrospect...

What got me going back to the library again was the lovely, kind, gentle librarian Mychal on TikTok; he reminded me of *library joy* and how libraries are inclusive by design. Hearing his stories and encouragement reminded me of how libraries were my safe space as a child, and that there was no good reason they shouldn't continue being joyful, safe spaces to me today. 

The closest library to me is the Jefferson Market library, which was initially a courthouse. When it was converted to a library in 1967, it was apparently one of the first adaptive reuse projects in the US. It is a wonderful, wacky piece of architecture that ends up feeling like a temple to books: 
Jefferson Market @ Nite // Jefferson Market @ Daytime. From street-level, you walk up this stained-glass spiral staircase in order to visit the main reading room and library desk.

I'm also impressed with the NYPL website and app, which are efficiently, but not overly tech-enabled. For the last two and a half years I've been unfortunately using Amazon to track my book wishlist, and I'm happy to report the NYPL app is a very happy alternative:
I was impressed that, with a recent book I checked out, the book was automatically renewed when I still hadn't returned it a week before the due date (though this is only true of books with no other holds/requests on them). Yay for simple, useful tech! 

All of this is to say that the NY Public Library is an absolutely essential space, service, institution in our city, and the budget cut being proposed for 2025 is unacceptable!


My hope is that this budget is a bargaining fake-out between the Mayor and the New York City Council (as is implied in the amNY article), and that these cuts were never actually proposed in seriousness. But it's a terrible thing to be toying with, in a time of disappearing Third Spaces and zealous book bans. What are we saying when we're saying these spaces are disposable, and that free access to books is unessential? How are we going to attempt to nurture curiosity and empathy in our children? How are we going to do that for our adults??

---
In other news, Happy St. Patrick's Day: Lá Fhéile Pádraig!


by Claire (claire.kao@hey.com) at March 18, 2024 04:08 AM

Certainly Strange

A Midsummer Night’s Dream

The other day I got to see the SF Ballet’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” which opened in 2020 for only one night before everything got shut down due to the pandemic. Civic Center as seen from the War Memorial Opera House Now, 4 years later, it is being performed again so it is a good … Continue reading "A Midsummer Night’s Dream"

by Steen at March 18, 2024 03:39 AM

I before E except Gleitzman

March 17, 2024

I Like Turtles

Moving home

/2024/03/17/moving-home.html

March 17, 2024 07:00 AM

March 13, 2024

Monoprinciples

Don’t fake it until you make it

“The worst crime I can think of would be to rip people off by faking it and pretending as if I’m having 100% fun.”

–Kurt Cobain

The old adage says to “fake it until you make it.” The “it” you fake is the persona you present to the world. Pretending to know what you’re doing, even when you don’t. The old adage is bad advice. When your insides are rare, don’t present as well done.

Lying to yourself about yourself triggers cognitive dissonance which is painful. You can never lie to yourself, so don't even try.

Besides, to fake pre-make is to rob yourself of the thrill of being a novice, a necessary phase of growth. You can’t be good at everything, especially at first, so enjoy the bumps along the way.

Instead of self-deception, consider some alternative, more compassionate frames. Like “Every day I'm getting a little better.” Or “Mistakes are a part of the process.” Or “It’s OK just to be OK.”

All of which to say, you are enough.

Even those standing in the “made it” circle (wherever that is), might still feel the cold shadow of self-imposed expectations. Warm yourself with this simple fact: you are not alone. You are a work in progress, and everyone else is too.

Microprinciples is medium-rare at best.

by V Sri at March 13, 2024 01:06 PM

March 11, 2024

Claire Kao

Godzilla (1954)

Bravo, bravo to Oppenheimer tonight, for its 7 wins, which included Best Picture. For me, it felt like the first time in a while that the Oscars have awarded cinematic achievement, for a movie that deserves to join the canon.

Over the summer, there were early critiques of the movie that it didn't show what happened on the other side of the bomb; that it failed by not centering the Japanese experience of the atomic bomb. While the horrific impact of the bomb in Japan should definitely be understood and felt by American audiences, I feel very strongly that it should be in the hands of a Japanese person that this pain is expressed, not Christopher Nolan. And for that, I recommend that anyone interested in the effects of the atomic bomb in Japan watch the original 1954 Godzilla.

I think to many in the US, Godzilla is seen as a cheap-thrill, tacky monster movie. This is in large part due to the way the movie was re-edited and released in the US. From J. Hoberman's Criterion essay:

In 1956, the American rights to Godzilla were acquired by Joseph E. Levine, who released it in a reedited, dubbed version titled Godzilla, King of the Monsters, which would be shown all over the world. Levine cut forty minutes from Honda’s movie, including references to Nagasaki, contaminated food, and wartime bomb shelters, and shot nearly as much new material, adding a narrative framework that provided an American perspective...[Levine didn't] seemed to grasp the implications of a Japanese movie on the subject of nuclear annihilation.

I was lucky to see the original Japanese version last week on the big screen, and was struck by how directly the movie makes its case against nuclear testing and weapons. In addition to explicit anti-nuclear dialogue, the movie considers devastated cityscapes, the agony and despair of innocents, the coming-together of Japanese communities after loss, and the ethical dilemmas of self-defense in a warring world. The movie is clearly rendered from recent emotions and images seared into the collective Japanese memory by WWII and Oppenheimer's bomb. 

Screenshots:


A scientist in the movie considers the ethical paradox that Robert Oppenheimer should have considered more forcefully, and that the film Oppenheimer implies the man ends up being haunted by. The scientist in Godzilla says: "They'll inevitably turn it into a weapon. A-bombs against A-bombs, H-bombs against H-bombs; as a scientist, no as a human being, adding another terrifying weapon to humanity's arsenal is something I can't allow."

The final line of the movie: "If nuclear testing continues, then someday, somewhere in the world, another Godzilla may appear."

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The movie Oppenheimer has also afforded me more insight into my personal family experience; though my family is Taiwanese, my grandfather spent the first 18 years of his life in Japan. After discussing the movie with him, I learned he was in Tokyo when the atomic bombs fell in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which I never knew before. We asked him what he remembers of the time, and he described an image he'll never forget from the front page the next day: a man sitting in a car with his arm raised to the ceiling handle, frozen in place by the blast. 

I agree with the sentiment of Oppenheimer's critics, and believe that we should all seek out more information about those harmed by the devastation of war, and do everything we can to stop occupation and genocide, the use of weapons of mass destruction, war in all forms.

by Claire (claire.kao@hey.com) at March 11, 2024 05:33 AM